Typification of Names in Iris (Iridaceae) Described by Victor Janka with Taxonomic Considerations

Viktor Janka von Bulcs described five names in Iris, i.e., I. balkana, I. cretensis, I. lorea, I. mellita, and I. sintenisii. These names are typified on specimens deposited at BP, JE, LD, and P, and taxonomical information is provided in the present report. Lectotypes are designated for I. mellita (a taxonomic synonym of I. suaveolens) deposited at Friedrich Schiller University Jena (JE), for I. sintenisii at Lund University (LD), and for I. lorea (a taxonomic synonym of I. sintenisii) at the French National Museum of Natural History (P). A neotype is designated and an image provided for the name I. balkana (a taxonomic synonym of I. reichenbachii) deposited at the Hungarian Natural History Museum (BP). The lectotype for I. cretensis (a taxonomic synonym of I. unguicularis) from JE is corrected. Images of plants of the accepted taxa are provided.


Introduction
Viktor Janka von Bulcs (1837-1900) was an Austrian botanist; his interest in botany arose during his childhood and continued to grow at high school. After meeting the Hungarian naturalist Lajos Haynald, Janka made botanical excursions with him near Cluj-Napoca, Romania [1]. In 1854, Janka joined the botanical research conducted by Philipp Johann Ferdinand Schur and Johann Mihály Fuss in Transylvania mainly near Cluj-Napoca, Sibiu, and Lugos. Additionally, he made a collecting trip to Banat with Haynald in 1856 and gathered plants in the Hungarian Great Plain in 1859 [1]. In 1870, Janka became the head of the Department of Botany, Natural History Museum of Hungary, where he served until his retirement in 1889. During this period, he explored the flora of the Balkans (including Bulgaria, Turkey, and Greece) in 1871-1872 (see, e.g., [2]) and Italy in 1874 [3,4].
Janka was a prolific author of numerous descriptions of vascular plants. At least 165 scientific names were published by Janka, and more than 30 taxa at the specific rank were published based on his own collections [5]. He collected many specimens throughout the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Most of Janka's personal herbarium is deposited at P (French National Museum of Natural History), while a smaller part can be found at BP (Hungarian Natural History Museum) [6]; the Balkans duplicates are deposited in many herbaria [7]. In honor of his achievements in plant collections, taxonomists also used Janka's surname for some epithets, e.g., jankae, jankeana, and jankaeanum, and the genus name Jankaea Boiss. [5].
Five species names in Iris L. were described by Janka in three works: I. cretensis Janka [8], I. balkana Janka and I. mellita Janka [9], and I. sintenisii Janka and I. lorea Janka [10] ( Figure 1). Of these five names, one has been previously typified [11], and four are typified here. This paper aims to contribute to the stability of the nomenclature by typifying these Iris names. The present study is part of a taxonomic revision of the genus Iris (e.g., [12,13]).

Materials and Methods
Typification was carried out through extensive analyses of the protologues and the relevant literature, as well as by examining physical material or digital images of specimens kept at BP, JE (https://www.jacq.org/#database; accessed on 15  Janka's Iris names are arranged in the chronological order of effective publication dates, including their synonyms in each entry and the information indicated in the proto-

Materials and Methods
Typification was carried out through extensive analyses of the protologues and the relevant literature, as well as by examining physical material or digital images of specimens kept at BP, JE (https://www.jacq.org/#database; accessed on 15  Janka's Iris names are arranged in the chronological order of effective publication dates, including their synonyms in each entry and the information indicated in the protologue ("Protologue citation"). The accepted names of the taxa are highlighted in bold italics. Here, the conservative taxonomy of Iris is used [16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23]. All specimens are cited in full. All relevant material associated with the designated specimens, as well as the barcode numbers following the herbarium acronyms, were cited. Specimens were physically seen (!) unless indicated otherwise (i.e., [digital image!]). For each type designated or corrected here, direct links to specimen's images available online are given; for one specimen unavailable online, a high-resolution image is shown. Notes on the nomenclature and taxonomy have been added for each typified name. = Iris unguicularis Poir., Voy. Barbarie 2: 86, 1789. Notes-Janka described Iris cretensis based on three specimens sent to him by the Austrian botanist Josef Claudius Pittoni [8]. The protologue for this name includes the synonym "I. humilis M. a B. e Candia a Siebero divulgata", indicating that plants were collected by Franz Wilhelm Sieber, an Austrian professional plant collector and distributor, and identified by him as I. humilis M.Bieb., nom. illeg. (Art. 53.1 of the ICN). Apparently, the plants were collected in 1817 near Heraklion (Crete, Greece), historically Candia, which was frequently mentioned by Sieber in his work [24].

Results and Discussion
Specimens of the exsiccatum "Iris humilis M.B. Candia", cited in the protologue of I. cretensis, accompanied by a label with the printed note "Iris humilis M.B. Candia", have been found at BP, JE, K, L, LE, and PRC. This exsiccatum is a part of Sieber's botanical collection known under the title "Herbarium Florae Creticae", issued in 1820 [25]. Davis and Jury [11] indicated that the holotype of I. cretensis was kept at JE as follows: "Type: Crete, Candia, 1841, Sieber s.n. (holotype JE!; isotype K!, P!, LE!)". As the protologue citation does not refer to a single specimen, the term "holotype", used by Davis and Jury [11], should be corrected to "lectotype" according to the Art. 9.10 of the ICN.
Subsequent authors (i.e., [31][32][33]) treated Iris cretensis as an eastern form of I. unguicularis differing by the narrower leaves and by the small flowers with narrow perianth segments (Figure 1a). Dykes [16,34] noted that the broad-leaved forms of I. unguicularis occurred in the western and eastern part of the distribution range and suggested that dwarf plants can be a form growing on dry and poor soil. In addition, Mathew [20] saw specimens of I. unguicularis from Turkey and North Africa that were as small as I. cretensis. Hence, in I. cretensis, we could find neither any discontinuities in variation that are independent of environmental effects nor any geographical pattern of variation. Consequently, I. unguicularis is very variable in the European range and I. cretensis is here considered as its heterotypic synonym [16][17][18][19][20][35][36][37].
(  Notes-Iris balkana was described by Janka without indicating any locality of collection [9]. In the section for the southeastern part of Hungary ("Adatok Magyarhon délkeleti vírányálioz"), Janka compared I. pumila L. with similar species and, for this reason, included here I. balkana and I. mellita (see below). Subsequently [10], Janka provided a more detailed description of I. balkana, also providing a colored illustration and asserted "Habitat in locis saxosis graminosis regionis mediae m. Balkan Thraciae borealis supra pag. Notes-Iris balkana was described by Janka without indicating any locality of collection [9]. In the section for the southeastern part of Hungary ("Adatok Magyarhon délkeleti vírányálioz"), Janka compared I. pumila L. with similar species and, for this reason, included here I. balkana and I. mellita (see below). Subsequently [10], Janka provided a more detailed description of I. balkana, also providing a colored illustration and asserted "Habitat in locis saxosis graminosis regionis mediae m. Balkan Thraciae borealis supra pag. Kalofer, . . . detexi d. 27. Maji 1871. Plantam vivam attuli, in horto meo nune laetissime vigentem".
According to this, I. balkana was discovered by Janka near Kalofer, located in the historical region of Northern Thrace, central Bulgaria, and then introduced into cultivation.
In the present study, we searched the specimens of Iris balkana with Janka's annotations and have found two specimens, BP HNHM-TRA00177926! and BP HNHM-TRA00177929!. These are dated 1877, i.e., after publication of I. balkana, and are therefore not the original material for the name. During World War II, some parts, including several types of BP collection, were moved to Alsópetény Village (Hungary), and most of them were destroyed there [38]. Most probably, the original material of I. balkana was included in this collection. Unfortunately, the original material, on which this name was based, has not been found in other examined herbaria. Therefore, a neotype may be selected according to the Art. 9.13 of the ICN. The specimen BP HNHM-TRA00177926! (Figure 2) is designated here as a neotype for I. balkana, since it is the most informative.
Janka [10] noted that Iris balkana is rather related to I. reichenbachii Heuff. However, Baker [39,40] assumed I. balkana to be a variety of I. chamaeiris. On the contrary, Armitage [41] reasonably pointed out that the foliage in I. balkana only appears in spring, and its distribution range is Eastern Europe. In fact, I. chamaeiris is a synonym of I. lutescens Lam., an evergreen species that is native to southern Europe, with its distribution range extending from Portugal to northwestern Italy [42]. Subsequently, I. balkana was regarded as a purple form or variety of I. reichenbachii [17,33,43,44] or as a synonym of the latter [19,20,45,46]. Iris reichenbachii is a Balkan endemic mainly common in the montane parts of Bulgaria, Montenegro, Serbia, North Macedonia, and northeast Greece. According to Mitra [47], the karyotypes of the 24-chromosome I. reichenbachii and I. balkana are similar. In contrast to yellow-flowered I. reichenbachii, I. balkana is purple-flowered, with blue beard hairs (Figure 1b,c). Some populations in Bulgaria consist of yellow-flowered or purpleflowered forms only (e.g., Golo Bardo Mountain), while in some others (e.g., the Rhodope Mountains), purple and yellow forms occur together (S. Stoyanov, pers. comm.). Notes-Originally, Iris mellita was described by Janka without indicating the collection locality [9]. In his following work [10], Janka provided the necessary clarifications as follows: "Habitat in herbidis aridis infra cacumen collis «Tschiendem-Tepe» prope Philippopolin Thraciae, ubi fructibus maturis d. 1. Julii 1871 . . . E seminibus coleo . . . ". According to this, I. mellita was first collected by Janka near Philippopolis, the former name for the modern city of Plovdiv located in the Northern Thrace, central southern Bulgaria, and then introduced into cultivation. Hence, we consider the name I. mellita to be based on specimens in fruiting, collected in Plovdiv Province, Bulgaria, in 1871, and plants raised from seeds by him.
The specimen JE00022413 is designated here as the lectotype of Iris mellita because it matches the information from Janka's work [10] and is certainly the original material for the name. The original label handwritten by Janka and identified by him as "Iris mellita Janka" accompanies this specimen. The following information from the label "Adatok 1874" corresponds to Janka's work [9].
The taxonomy of Iris mellita has been a source of confusion. In particular, Janka [10] associated his I. mellita with I. rubromarginata Baker described a year earlier, and, as a result, I. mellita was attributed to I. rubromarginata at the rank of subspecies [48] or variety [49]. Subsequently, I. mellita was recognized as a distinct species, including I. rubromarginata and I. straussii Micheli [16,43,50]. On the contrary, Peckham [45] treated I. mellita as a synonym of second joint journey of Pietro Porta and Gregorio Rigo in 1875. The area of Terra d'Otranto is a geographical region of Apulia, Italy, largely corresponding to the Salento Peninsula.
Clementi [58] noted that the type of Iris lorea had not been designated. At BP, K, and P, we have found five duplicates that match the information from the protologue and are, hence, the original material for the name. The specimen P02167368 is designated here as lectotype because it is the most informative one. Huter identified and distributed the herbarium specimens collected by Porta and Rigo; however, the date and the collection number during the journey of Porta and Rigo to Apulia in 1875, as well as the collector's information, are often missing [59]. The specimens accompanied by the printed labels, annotated as "№ 382. Porta et Rigo ex itinere II italico", were identified by Huter as follows: "foetidissima auctor. Italic". Therefore, we believe that these specimens refer to the exsiccatum issued by Huter. As it follows from the contents of the labels, the plants of this exsiccatum were collected near Cerignola in the Foggia Province, Italy, and the flowering stems were terete.
Janka [10] noted that Iris lorea, while being comparable with I. sintenisii by the elongated, terete stem, and elongated perianth tube, however, differed from the latter by its pale green and very long leaves, much longer than the stem, and by the herbaceous, green bracts. The etymology of the specific epithet lorea (from the Latin loreus) is from the lorate, or strap-shaped, rosette leaves. The lorate leaves are also characteristic of I. sintenisii (see above). We are inclined to suggest that the morphological differences between I. lorea and typical I. sintenisii are few. As regards the habitat of I. lorea, it was found in a swampy coastal area, which is not a common condition of the xerophilous I. sintenisii. However, smaller plants than those of I. lorea, i.e., typical of I. sintenisii, occur in dry places in Apulia (Figure 1g,h; see also the image [60]).
Janka [10] simultaneously published Iris sintenisii and I. lorea; however, Dykes [16] established priority of I. sintenisii (see Art. 11.5, Note 3 of the ICN). Both of these names have been referred to the same taxon, Xiphion collinum (N.Terracc.) [61] or Iris graminea var. collina (N.Terracc.) Fiori [62]. After the combinations based on I. lorea were proposed 1907 (see above), this taxon was not mentioned in the literature for a long time, except for a mention by Prodan [63]. Since 2007, it has been actually reinstated for the Italian flora and cited as I. lorea [64,65] or Chamaeiris lorea [60,[66][67][68], often including I. sintenisii as a synonym. However, although the plants from Italy are claimed to be distinct, I. lorea closely resembles I. sintenisii and should be regarded as a synonym of it [19,20,22,33,45], which we completely support. In southern Italy, I. sintenisii is distributed in the regions of Abruzzo, Apulia, Basilicata, Calabria, Campania, and Molise. Italy) for his help in searching for some literature sources. We also thank Stoayan Stoyanov (Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences), Rocco Labadessa (Institute for Atmospheric Pollution, Rome, Italy), and Arne Strid (freelancer, Denmark) who generously provided and permitted to use photographs of irises. This study was carried out in the framework of the institutional research project of the Botanical Garden-Institute, Far Eastern Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences (no. 122040800085-4).

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.